Evening Star Newspaper, March 13, 1933, Page 3

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MACHINES TRACE CAUSE OF QUAKE First Actual Records Taken 1 in Los Angeles Disaster by U. S. Officials. By the Associated Press. The California earthquake has given Bcientists their first accurate, first-] knowledge of just how the ground shakes during an earthquake. It may lead to prevention of earthquake disas- ters in the future. ‘The Coast and Geodetic Survey an- nounced today that all four of its earthquake-recording instruments in the zone of the California quake had made satisfactory records of the first shocks and were continuing to record subsequent shocks as they occurred. ‘This was the first test of the instru- ments, 12 of which were installed a few months ago in regions where it was believed earthquakes might occur, al- though there was no way of knowing whether a shock would come within a week or a century. Records of actual ground movements, made by the instruments, are intended primarily for use by engineers in de- signing buildings that will resist earth- quake shocks. The earthquake drew a picture of its own actions, for essentially the machines consist of & strip of photographic paper that is moved by the shaking earth un- der a stationary spotlight that etches a zigzag lme on the paper. The ma- chines were automatically started by the first shock Friday evening. One record showed the speed and dis- tance of the ground movement, and the other recorded the force of the shock. Capt. N. H. Heck of the Coast Survey said analysis and interpretation of the records would require considerable time. This is the first scientific record of an earthquake's behavior, he explained. Seismographs, the machines that record earthquake shocks from a distance, are too delicate to be useful at the center of a quake, for the violence of the shock disrupts their mechanism. QUAKE AREA GIRDS TO REPAIR LOSSES SET AT $40,000,000 (Continued From First Page.) Angeles County Board of Supervisors, announced he would present two reso- Jutions before that body, the first call- ing upon heads of all cities and unin- corporated territories where damage oc- curred to submit estimates of their losses. Will Seek R. F. C. Loan. If the resolution is adopted, Skaw said he will seek to obtain from the finance corporation & loan for rehabili- tation of property. A second resolution would ask the finance corporation for a loan of $10,- 000,000 to build 'a new county court house here. The present structure, damaged by the quake, cannot be oc- cupied. A ray of hope that the seriousness of the disaster would not be increased by the spread of diseass was seen. Officers were sent into every stricken vone to inspect sewage, housing, water, dairy supplies and general sanitation. Laboratory testing stations were set up in central areas. Through them 2,000 quarts of milk, 4,000 loaves of bread and more than 5,000 gallons of bottled water were dis- tributed. This represented lut a por- tion of the supplies provided, thousands of dollars worth of foodstuffs and tem- porary housing quarters being offered by private citizens and business or- ganizations. Large amounts of medicine, particu- larly typhoid vaccine, were delivered to health centers as a measure of preven- tion. A close watch was being kept for signs of typhoid or smallpox and out- breaks of pneumonia. The absence of attempted looting was marked, only one arrest having been made in the Long Beach district. The rapid organization of citizens into semi- military groups, led by 10,000 blue- Jackets from the United States fleet, contributed to the maintenance of order. Patrols on Wlert. Patrols were on constant guard in many of the 152 cities which felt the effects of the earthquakes. During Sunday some 20,000 motorists attempted to enter the devastated sections, princi- pally bent on sightseeing, but only about 6,000 were admitted. In virtually every city a full day of work had been done in removing build- ing hazards, such as tearing down tottering walls. This put hundreds of unemployed to work. School students in Long Beach, Compton, Los Angeles and some smaller communities went on an early Easter vacation for a week. A preliminary survey of school buildings here disclosed that about 22 “cannot be used,” the Board of Education announced. Hope that the real period of danger had passed was found in the statements of earthquake experts and scientists that history tended to prcve the first series of disturbances to be the worst. Dr. Harry O. Wood, head of the staff at the seismological laboratory of the Camegie Institution of Washington, at Pasadena, issued a statement, saying: “It is usual that in cases like the present one the first shock is by far the strongest. Though no one can predict the future it is to be expected that the present event will follow the usual course.” SAFE IN QUAKE AREA Mrs. Marie Church Vorhees and JFamily Formerly Lived Here. Relatives here of Mrs. Marie Church Voorhees, a former resident of Wash- ington, now living in Long Beach, Calif., have been advised by telegram that she and her family came through the -re- cent earthquakes there uninjured. Mrs. Voorhees, the former Miss Marie Church, has been a resident of Cali- fornia for the past eight years. The wire was recelved here by en aunt, Miss Laura R. Church of Tilden Gar- dens Apartr ents. . Pritons now own 77 per cent of the tor_cars uscd on Argentine railways. SPECIAL NOTICES. _ 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one other than my- self. WILLIAM TUCKSON. 476 Kings ct. CAR SHIPMENT _ TO PACIFIC t large saving in freight charges. Ma: _Security Storage Co., 1140 15tk st. FOR PROMPT. EFFICIENT AND REASON- “ mble electrical repair service. call the Electric Shop on Wheels, Inc.. and a complete ‘mnn to_your door. Wis. 4 MOVING BETWEEN ALL ‘Bervice since 1896.”" Da- & Storage Co. 1117 H will bé broughi LONG-DIST! Eastern poirts. vidson's Trln'l!l‘{ WASHINGT! the outskirts of Los Angeles. bodies in wreckage of office building. Upper left: The trall of havoc left by the earthquake in Huntington Park, on Firemen and volunteers are pictured searchi Lower left: Scene in Compton, showing a sailor guarding a line of auto- mobiles wrecked when a wall collapsed on them. for —Wide World Photo. —A. P. Photo. : i Upper center: Telephoto sent from of Jefferson Junior High School at Long Beach. Long Beach suffered lhe'bulldlnz at Central and Slauson streets, Los Angeles, in the earthquake that greatest damage and loss of Jife. Los Angeles to New York shows ruins —Wide World Photo. | Lower center: Wing of the Seaside Hospital, Long Beach, pletured after the | was performed. —A. P. Photo. | Upper right: One person was kille struck Southern California Friday. Lower right: The upper front of this two-story business building at Santa quake. Not long after the wall fell a baby girl was born and a delicate operation | Ana toppled fcrward under the force of the earth shocks, a parked 'fluwmobue | being half buried by the failing debris. Revised Death List By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, March 13—The re- vised list of the dead in the earthquake of Friday, exclusive of Long Beach: Compton. Dr. Ashley Mirkins, 467 West School street. Harold Glenn, Las Campans Hospital. Henrietta Gunderman, 17, 328 West Compton avenue. Ray Jane Boyer, 2, 7768 Mira Vista | boulevard. William B. Marshall, street. Ruby Wade, Compton School janitor. Junior Wade, 1. Isabel Lane, 2241 Springdale avenue. Miss Marie Harrington, Dominguez road. Mrs, B. W. Simpson, 3517 Orchard street, Lynwood. Margaret Simpson, Lynwood. Emil Johnson, 24, Downey. Forresy Brinkerhoff, 1425 Tamarind street. Don Dillon, 9, 325 Tamarind street. Mrs. Donald Hepler, 30. Four unidentified men. Huntington Park. Alice G. Anthony, 4378 East Pifty- seventh street. Mrs. Clarence Greenmayer, 6418 Seville avenue. H. Loebs, 37, 5965 Pacific boulevard. J. A. McLaughlin, 59, 2652 Hill street, Los Angeles. Dorothy Martyne, 30, 6500 Pacific boulevard. 2913 Liberty street, Albert Olson, Southgate. Mrs. Rachel Swenson, 39, 3462 Wal- nut street, William C. Van Noy, 58, 2343 Flower street, Walnut Park. One unidentified woman. San Pedro. John W. Murray, 23, sailor, U. 8. S. | Marblehead. 212 Spruce Watts. Frank W. Tobias, 35, 1853 Crenshaw boulevard. Albert Revas, 30, 10600 Hickory. Albert Rivas, 35, laborer. Prancisco Navarriette, 32, Hickory street. Mrs. Ellen Eicoat, 78, 100th street and Willington avenue. Mrs. Kroeninger, 84, 102nd street and ‘Wilmington avenue. One unidentified man, Mexican. John Doe Elcoat. Santa Ana. Earl Adamson. Jack Ellison, 2501 Ivy place. Mrs. Jack Ellison, 2501 Ivy place. Garden Groce. Elizabeth Pollard, 13, Eighth and College streets. Los Angeles, Irene Henricksen, 11. Mrs. Luella Alcrum, 32. Antonio Ducharne, 32. Henry Ufen, 45. Norwalk. Henry Massey. Monroe De Buxton. Artesia. George Stone. Steven Green. Bellflower. Mrs. Irene Campbell. Mrs. Frank Ball. Wilmington. Mrs. M. J. Corwin, 46, avenue. Il Montebello. Flora Weedon, 23, 120 South Green- wood. 10600 1468 Ronan Hermosa Beach. Mrs. Alice May Moore, 61, 827 Pler avenue, heart attack. Santa Monica. Carl Morton, 38, Santa Monica po- | liceman, 721 Twenty-first Street, killed (in_air crash en route to Long Beach. Frederic C. Porter, 36, 2202 La Mesa drive, Santa man, killed in same crash. Charles V. Towns, 33, airport man- THE | ager, also killed in crash. such ‘other business as may prope: before the meeting. _Polls open at 12 m. and close at 1 p.m. _P. H. RIDGWAY, Secretary. WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO or from New York. Richmond, Boston, Pitis- Ritomas Bl N POREEN P5NE! N. Y. ave.Nat. 1460. Local IOT IN BUSINESS FOR MY HEALTH. gg;“t‘)lle he:zthd o!“ynar bu;lnfilimahll‘ld IETTES S O1BEC 06 %6 fat 0 MARCH 13 MARCH 11 W ,..MARCH 14 TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. 1313 You St. N.W. DAY ROOFS , tight—free from rulnous lesks. have the other kind? We make & wpecialty” of repairs. “.KOONS BoostAg” o5y o b COMPANY North 4423 Pacoima. ‘William O. John, 63, heart attack. Eight persons were listed on the Tec- ords of the Los Angeles coroner’s office as having died of shock. Those listed "iimle Peterson, 45, 424 North For- mosa street. Dorothy Cudley, 174, 3543 Platt avenue. Margaret Wood, 60, 951 West Thirty- ninth place. D. W. Smythe, 8967 Shoreham drive. . Willlam Carlson, 59, 1422 East Six- Robert McMitchell, 82, 857 West Fifty -first e. tiesh street. Thomas Neat, 68, 11972 Keowa street. Matthew Leuck, 70, 3133 Grant Vilia | Fi ce. Ths official Long Bzach, death list, Monica-Chicago sports- | Gf QUAKE RELIEF DELAYS| EXERCISES OF FLEET| Postponement of One Week Is An-| nounced by Admiral Richard H. Leigh. Earthquake relief in California, in which the Navy and Marine Corps are participating, will delay fleet exercises off the West Coast for a week, Admiral Richard H. Leigh, commander in chief, told the Navy Department yesterday. The admiral said, “On account of | conditions ashore in Long Beach area and urgent need of assistance on shore from the fleet, exercises scheduled for’| weeks beginning March 13 and Me-~h 20 will each be delayed one week. Ships will remain at anchor for upkeep | this week.” = | Between March 13 and 26 the pro- gram had provided tactical drills for all units of the Battle and Scouting | Forces. Further instructions for re- | sumption of scheduled maneuvers will be issued early this week, Admiral Leigh informed the department. One of the naval patrols ashore from | the U.S.S. Arizona, David Lee Ganious, gunner's mate, third class, died Satur- day from a gunshot wound, thought to have been received accidentally, while on shore duty in Long Beach, the de- partment was told. Ganious’ next of | kin is his mother, Mrs. Bessie Mills Ganious of Cairo, Ga. Supper at Colvin Run. COLVIN RUN, Va, March 13 (Spe- cial).—An oyster supper will be served tomorrow night at the Colvin Run Community Hall for the benefit of the Brown’s Chapel M. E. Church. The committee announces that in case of rain the supper will be held on the first fair evening. compiled after two or more persons identified the bcdies, follows: Stanley Taylor, 1133 Pine street. Fred B. Cole, 2611 East Fourth street. Mrs. Millie Herman, 35, 731 St. Louis avenue. Mrs. Pearl Miller, 40, formerly of Rawlins, Wyo. Charles B. Wright, 1488 Atlantic ave- nue. Frank Lee McCarthy, 40, 926 Garland ave. Howard T. Kennedy, Post Office clerk. Helen Leverick, 23, 255 Tabler street. Mrs. August Lantz, 2136 West Fourth street. Mrs. Leona C. Eller, 1507 East Fif- teenth street. A. E. Summers, 1753 Gardena street. F. G. Bryner, 40, 1469 Gaviota ave- ™ Dorothy Kane, 15, 20 West Zane street. Spindler, 4, 1406 East Dolores Anaheim. Dwight Cormish, 15, no address. Mrs. Margaret Dary, 324 West Seven- teenth street. Ted Davis, Los Angeles, motor cycle officer. Donald Slauson, 905 Cherry avenue. J. W. Wilhoit, 1025 Newport avenue. Ramona Cignilino, 30, 529 West Third street. Mrs. John A. Rogersm, 527 West Third street. Mrs. Phoebe Brichard, 435 East Fourth street. Norman Barrett, 18, 1250 Palm street, San Luis Obispo. Lyle Pettit, 23, Cypress. Mary J. Seelig, 45, 847 Gardena. Warren Bally, 21. Emil Johnson, 131 East Maple. ‘Terrance Roberts, 13, 2170 Lemon avenue. Clayton Steeves, 23, 608-B Magnolia. Mrs. J. W. Mitchell, 18, 1035-A Orange avenue. James Brodie, 28, assistant manager W. Chittenden, 86, 1521 ardena. tgxullne B. Saunders, 2234 Dalsy stréet. J lDorothy Searle, 15, Louise and Elm street. C. P. Wertzbaugher, 40, 1302 Dawson street. Gregory E. Calder, 1782 Cerritos avenue, Jack Freeman, 40, 1726 East Sixth street. "Mrs. Wharton, 45, 1257 East Bixth S Fehy Guegllomo, 17, San Pedro. ‘on; omo, 17, San % tr'ggt; K- “Kigarasni” 841 East Eagle S| . Dixieana Parks, 743 East State street. Mrs. James Munday, 50, California Apartments. Edward Rogos, 53 South Magnolia. C. E. Ceitzler, Wilmington. —Crombie, Post office clerk. » re enf Two middle aged men and & woman of about 40 years were unidentified, lly 350,000 Inquiries Received.| ‘:nph and telephone business. QUAKE MESSAGES REACH HUGE TOTAL Telegraph Companies Report Near- Telephones Also Flooded With Calls, LOS ANGELES, March 13.—Southern | Cdlifornia’s earthquake caused an al- most unprecedented increase in tele- Officials of the two telegraph com- panies estimate that nearly 350,000 messages of inquiry about the welfare | of persons in the quake area from rela- | tives and friends have been received since Friday night. They said that virtually all of these messages were answered. The telephone company reported its long-distance calls, to and from Los Angeles, increased as much as 150 per | cent. Saturday 31000 long-distance | calls were handled. A normal day sees 12.000 calls. “Telegraph companies put on 300 extra | operators, 350 extra messenger boys and 150 other extra employes during the PAYS WITH 1866 BILL Barber’s Customer Only His 50 | ™ Cent Note of 67 Years Ago. DENVER, March 13 (#).—“All the | cash I have” said the customer who | handed B. C. Reaves, a barber, a tat- tered bill in payment for a haircut. It was a 5C-cent note printed in 1866. Reeves accepted it. —— INUTE YSTERY Can VYou $olveyft 2 acr Dr. Fordney is professor of criminology at | & famous university. His advice is often sought by the police of many cities when cf h particularly baffiing cases. ‘This problem has been taken from his case- book ‘covering hundreds of criminal investi- gations. Try vour wits on it! Tt takes but ONE MINUTE to read! Every fact and every clue necessary to its solution are in the story itself—and there is only one answer. How good a detective are you? The River Road Tragedy. BY H. A, RIPLEY. (] CANT help it if his wealthy old ‘ma’ don’t want a scandal in the family . . . he committed suicide!” insisted Ben Hanson, who lived in a shack on the river bank near the spot where the body of Clyde Church was found. Ben was undoubtedly responsible for the absence of money on the dead body, mused the pro- fessor. attend to that heavy rains which, had roiled the water and in- the cur- rent. | Could the two ticket stubs, found on the body, be a clue. wondered ey. “I was on my way home and when I got there saw Church ahead of me. He was actin’ queer,” continued Hanson. “I watched ‘im & minute and went inside. I jest closed the door when I heard a shot. I looked out the window and saw ’im fall. I ran out, but there weren't no ‘un in sight . .. and YOU needn't think I took his money 'cause I never touched *im,” concluded Ben, as if the professor’s thoughts. Fordney smiled. He knew from the purplish cast of the face, with its in- stantly fatal head wound, that the body had fallen forward and remained in that position long enough for post- mortem lividity to set in. The police found the body on its back! “I'm not concerned about his Well, he'd| QUAKE EYE-WITNESS ARRIVES | BY PLANE | William H. Evans, Culver City, | Tells How Building _Swung. Needs to Be Described in Conference Sought With President. Willlam H. Evans of Culver City, Calif,, a suburb of Los Angeles, arrived here yesterday afternoon on the Penn- sylvania Alrlines, the first eyewitness of the earthquake to reach the Capital. Evans, a bullder and developer, is on a volunteer mission to lay the plight of the residents of the stricken country U‘(m;e the President, and seek financial relief. The class that will need aid greatly, | he said, are those of small means, prin- cipally the elderly who are living on retirement income, whose homes were wrecked. Evans planned to see Senators M- Adoo and Johnson to arrange for the hoped-for conference with President Roosevel:. | The Californian was in & downtown | hotel in Los Angeles when the earth began to tremble. Rushing outside, he observed the building he had just left swinging as though on a pendulum. T've been in a cyclone, but it didn't compare to this experience,” he said. “This sort of thing leaves you dazed.” The visitor was high in his praise of the sailors and Marines from jhe fleet who landed in the quake area and gave | their services wherever needed. PLAN GLOBE FLIGHT Mattetn and Grifin Hope to Take Off on New Attempt in June. FORT WORTH, Tex., March 13 (#).— James Mattern, Fort Worth ocean flyer, {said yesterday he and Bennett Griffin of Oklahoma City expect to take off in June or early in July on their projected flight around the world. 5 - ‘They hope to break the Wiley Post- Harold Gatty record. They will leave in a few days for Chicago in a new “Century of Progress,” rebuilt from the plane which was dam- aged in their forced landing in Russia last Summer. SR S ) Crockery Forms Sidewalk. Crockery bottoms form the queer side- walk at the home of Mrs. A. B. Pitts near Tyler, Tex. Necks of the crock- ery are turned down, leaving the smooth surface of the bottoms for the walk. Mrs. Pitts doesn’t know who made the strange walk. It was there when she acquired the property, Quakes Give Work To Jobless Army In Stricken Area By the Associated Press. ANGELES, March 13— Southern California’s week end of earthquakes has solved the unemployment problem at least temporarily for about 7,000 men. More than 3.000 are cleaning up the debris-littered streets of Long Beach. In Santa Ana 800 were put to work. Three hun- dred each were called upon in Compton, Bell, San Pedro and Inglewood, Laborers employed in scores of other cities were estimated by |Man Suffers Cuts and Bruises relief officials at 2,000. AT THE FIRST SNEEZE NIGHT end MORNING b (For noluflm)ne New 2 Way Mistol Treatment for Colds d and 13 injured in collapse of this| —A. P. Photo. | —A. P. Photo. TO URGE RELIEF WILLIAM H. EVANS. —Star Staff Photo. | GOEBBELS APPOINTED T0 HEAD PROPAGANDA President Von Hindenburg Also| Names Walther Funk State Secretary. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, March 13.—President . von Hindenburg today appointed DY, Jo- seph Goebbels as the Reich's minister of public enlightment and propaganda, | with Walther Funk, the government press clfef, as his state secretary. | Dr. Goebbels is one of the outstand- | ing members of Hitler's Nazi party, having been chief of propaganda in the | Nazi movement and leader of the Ber- | lin district of the party for years. He is also editor of the Daily Angriff. ‘The prepaganda ministry is a new department. Dr. Goebbels will control | all government avenues of publicity | such as the press department, broad- | casting stations and movies. He has accompanied Hitler on =all his tours since assuming the chancellorship and | delivered supplementary talks. He is regarded as one of the best popular orators in Germany. | Dr. Wilhelm Frick, minister of the | interior, issued orders to all state min- | isters and interior and Reich commis- sioners today to prevent assaults on or disturbances before départment stores. | The Nazi minister stated that not only employes and public, together with own- ers, but also the authority of the state suffered by such unlawful intrusions. Nazi crowds have picketed such stores in_the last few days and some vollence has occurred. The Nazis be- lieve suppression of chain stores and the large business houses will ald in business recovery, TREATED FOR CAR HURTS ‘When Struck by Auto. Joe Fhelani of the 600 block of Third street was treated at Emergency Hos- pital this morning for bruises and cuts about the scalp suffered when he was | hit by an automobile at Sixth and B| streets southwest. The automobile, police reported, was driven by Andrew | Robinson of Alexandria, Va. Fheiani “rid not believed to be seriously in- jured. The fire rescue squad was summoned to the scene of the accident, but Fheiant had been removed to the hospital in a private car when the firemen arrived. | -~ AR Man Imprisoned 2 Days by Quake Seeks Relatives By the Associated Press. LONG BEACH, Calif, March 13—Locked since Friday night in the cellar of his home, Charles B. Dunn succeeded in extricating himself at 9:15 p.m. last night. Dunn said the cellar exit was blocked when the earthquake shook down a section of his home. He said he had not been able to find his wife and small child, but police believed they prpbably Were in some temporary camp and Dunn began a round of re- lief quarters in search of them. Pomona Proprietor's Son Pureues Small Dapper Man Armed With Revolver. A well dressed young man held up the cashier of the Prmona Restaurant, 1307 E street, at pitol point last night, tiatched’ $200 I bills when the. Sor evening crowd. The youth, described as blonde, small and dapper, entered the about 9:30 o'clock, apprcached the cashier’s cage in which Miss Florence | Seeger, 1112 G street, the cashier, sat, and inquired for the manager. When Miss Seeger told him that one | of the proprietors of the restaurant, | Bernard Lurba, was in the rear, he drew a gun and commanded, “Hand | Aill\l'er" the money before I start shcot- | Miss Seeger collapsed and the bandit | seized all the bills in sight, passing up several packages of coins. He pocketed his gun and ran from the restaurant toward Thirteenth street. Ten-year-old Jess Lurba, son of the proprietor, who with his sister Viclet, 13, | witnessed the hold-up, ran after the robber, crying, “Stop him!" S For leaving a horse without food or water for a week while they disputed its ownership, Stanley Edwards and | Thomas Pickworth have been arrested | in Hull, England, lapsed and escaped through the mid- | restaurant | barmicss cases. , Hot Since 1807, Trial is proof-25c. BELL-ANSY; [z evenia Sure water, S RUSH PRINTING EXPERT SERVIC HIGH GRADE —NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS “See Etz and See Better” OUR eyes, a treas- ured possession of vital importance, care for them zealousy by visiting only a competent optome- trist twice a year. ETZ Optometrists 1217 G St. N.W. Guararias of Real Root Juices Make 40 bottles of delicious and health- ful Hires Root Beer from 1 bottle of Hires Root Beer Extract. Costs le: than 1¢ per glass. Save money, yet give your family apure, wholesome beverage. sands suecessfully treated wit] FOE, a doctor’s prescriptio: thing, healing applic: brings blessed relief to ru moni; its THE GREATEST OFFER OF C. A. Muddiman Co.’s 45 Years of Business! 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This wonderful cone-cleaned hard coal purities, burns slowly, leaves little ash, and with auto- matic control you make your re- gardless of the weather out- own temperature . . . side. Storage 14t and Bureax office 3. S.W., opposite and " Printing, free of all im-

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